Apple's iPad and the Internet

The virtual tremors began at the start of the iPad's world-changing debut, shortly after 10 a.m. PST. Twitter was already at a crawl by that point, with users complaining of missing and long-delayed tweets. Thus far, Twitter has only acknowledged the existence of the problem and said it is "investigating the source."

"It's been a tough day for us and our customers," Cover It Live President Keith McSpurren tells me. "We've got smart people who generally try very hard to make this thing work, but we didn't even see the breadth and depth of today's coverage."

All Eyes on iPad

McSpurren estimates his service was slammed with nearly twice the traffic it's experienced on past events, including previous Apple announcements. That same surge may have been to blame for other more localized outages: Several sites using Cover It Live were themselves down during the iPad's revelation, McSpurren says -- some of them sites with recognizable names.

Both Engadget and Gizmodo, two of the Web's biggest tech blogs, were inaccessible during parts of the Apple event, according to user reports on Twitter and other places. Web broadcaster Leo Laporte's live audio stream of the event is also said to have crashed during the iPad's introduction.

And it wasn't just tech sites suffering: Some Internet service providers, such as the UK's Level1 Internet Services, told customers all the iPad attention was putting pretty much the entire Internet in a chokehold.

"Apple iPad launch still slowing down the Internet. Popular web sites are slow to load, and e-mails still taking longer to deliver," the company said in a support advisory.

iPad, iMad

The iPad-inspired user-written tweets may be the most telling of all. Some were sent in good humor; others seem to show an underlying resentment of Jobs and the "Apple fanboy" frenzy.

"I think the Internet is about to go down...going so slow. Thanks, Apple," wrote Twitter user nickbell79.

"Every site I look for latest news on the Apple event is running really slow," agreed user dbslone. "Waiting on the whole Internet to crash."